Customer Reviews

4.5 out of 5

53 Ratings

Dissapointing Album with Poor Sound

Donnie Q, Apr 3, 2017

First, this is nowhere near being the best Darkest Hour album. Fan Boys might disagree but in my opinion this album is a step in the wrong direction. YEs, I know it is heavier than their other albums. However, their classic melodic style is gone. Also, whoever engineered the sound of this album should not do another album again. Drums sound like crap. The guitar sound does not have the clarity of past albums. I will listen again more times but this album is not good.

Great Album - Heaviest Version of DH Yet

Sutarab, Mar 10, 2017

Bands always claim their next album is their heaviest ever but for this album it is true. After a step on the lighter side on their last work, Darkest Hour is back with the heaviest version of their classic melodic death metal/thrash/punk fusion.

You can tell this was the album they wanted to make, as they crowdfunded it to be free of record label restraints. It has the passion of the early days (Judas/Sadist Nation), the melody of the middle stage (Undoing Ruin/Deliver Us), and the heavy crunch of the later records (Eternal Return/Human Romance).

If you like DH you'll love this album. My personal favorites: #3 Timeless Numbers (great atmosphere and clever riffs)#9 Enter Oblivion (slow build to catchy heavy chorus)#11 In the Name Of Us All (pure thrash punk metal)#12 Beneath It Sleeps (could fit right in with Paradise/Tranquil at the end of Undoing Ruin - 'nuff said)

I give credit to the band for this album - they stuck to their roots and made a masterpiece. Cheers.

About Darkest Hour

Washington, D.C.'s Darkest Hour are supporters of the death metal/hardcore merger, founded in the early '90s by such outfits as Carcass and Entombed. Comprising members Mike Schleibaum (guitar), Billups Allen (bass), John Henry (vocals), Fred Ziomek (guitar), and Ryan Parrish (drums), the band formed in the mid-'90s, inking a deal with the New York-based underground metal label MIA Records in 1999. The quintet issued its debut recording a year later, The Mark of the Judas, and was ready to support the release when its label suddenly went out of business.

Label-less but not down and out, Darkest Hour quickly gained the interest of Victory Records, issuing a sophomore effort, So Sedated, So Secure, in July of 2001. It was followed by the release of Hidden Hands of a Sadist Nation in 2003, an album proclaimed by Revolver to be a "metalcore classic." Summer 2004 found Darkest Hour with a slot on Ozzfest's second stage. The following February, Darkest Hour released a DVD, Prison Scars and Party Bars: A Thrashography, which documented their first ten years as a band (1995-2005) with music videos, live footage, and interviews. Back on the album front, the well-received Undoing Ruin appeared in June 2005 before A-F Records issued the rarities collection Archives (which included their two earliest EPs, 1996's The Misanthrope and 1999's The Prophecy Fulfilled) that October. Deliver Us arrived in the summer of 2007 followed by Eternal Return in 2009. They supported the album by opening for Trivium on the Summer Slaughter tour.

In April they left Victory after a full decade on the label, and signed with eOne. The Human Romance, produced by Peter Wichers of Soilwork, was issued in February of 2011. The album entered Billboard's Heatseekers chart at number three. After extensive touring, Parrish left the band in December, followed by bassist Paul Burnette six months later. They were eventually replaced by drummer Travis Orbin and bassist Aaron Deal.

The label arrangement with eOne was short-lived; Darkest Hour signed with Sumerian Records in 2013. Producer Taylor Larson (I, the Breather, Periphery) was enlisted and helped the band to craft a new sound that focused more on hook-laden, melodic death songwriting. Simply titled Darkest Hour, the set was issued in August of 2014. ~ Greg Prato